About half of asthma sufferers have some degree of gastroesophageal reflux disease, or GERD, characterized by repeated bouts of acid reflux or heartburn. Duke University researchers say that may be because the stomach contents and acidic digestive juices that reflux into the lungs and esophagus injure lung tissue and over time can lead to asthma-causing immune system changes.
To curb GERD: Eat smaller meals; limit trigger foods; and ask your doctor whether you should take medication.
2. Boost your fitness with food
To boost your HDL: Try exercise, weight control and a diet high in monounsaturated fats, such as olive oil, nuts, avocados and olives. A Finnish study also showed that about two-thirds of a cup of berries daily for two months helped raise HDL and reduce high blood pressure.
3. For energy, move it
4. Sweat it out ... 
But before you put on your hard-core sprinter's game face, note: The American Heart Association recommends 30 minutes of moderate-intensity exercise most days of the week for metabolic syndrome sufferers. Consult your doctor before changing your workout.
5. Ditch depression with D 
But don't stop there. You can eat your way to a happier day. Omega-3 fatty acids found in foods such as salmon, walnuts, flaxseed, scallops and cod-liver oil also help fight depression, mood disorders, schizophrenia and dementia, found a study in the medical journal "Nature Reviews Neuroscience."
6. Get soles 
7. Go from good to grape 
Turns out, juice sippers can enjoy the health benefits of grapes the same as their wine-drinking counterparts. The fruit, consumed in all its forms, can reduce the risk of heart disease, a new study finds. Grape juice improves blood flow and lowers blood pressure; grape-seed extract helps to lower cholesterol.
8. Go soft on sleep
Hard beds are often prescribed for back-pain sufferers, but new research finds soft is better. In a Danish study, people with chronic low back pain who slept on water beds or a body-conforming foam mattress reported less pain and nearly an hour more of sleep a night than those who slept on a hard futon mattress for a month.
9. Make like a fish and swim
Time to take a dip. Low-impact water exercises can ease pain and improve function in people with osteoarthritis of the hip and knee, concludes a medical review. Exercising in water is especially effective for reducing knee pain. In a Brazilian study, osteoarthritis patients reported 22% less knee pain immediately after aquatic exercise than after conventional exercises. Pool therapy, such as strengthening, stretching and aerobic exercises, lightens the body-weight load on joints.
10. Network your way to happiness
It's no surprise that we are influenced by the moods of those around us. But now, a study shows that people we don't even know can make us happier.
According to a new study, you can be six degrees removed from someone and still catch that person's good karma. In other words, happiness is "viral," and it actually can spread not just from one friend to another, but to friends of friends of friends. That's what researchers at Harvard Medical School and the University of California-San Diego found when they analyzed the social networks of 4,739 people who had filled out a questionnaire about how happy they were.
So if you've resisted joining a social networking website such as Facebook or LinkedIn or trying real-world activities like book clubs or professional networking events, maybe it's time to explore!
11. Pop some pine bark 
12. Look for the salt
"Consumer Reports" finds sodium stashed in alarming quantities in some surprising sources, ranging from cottage cheese to Caesar salads.
Among the 37 processed foods the magazine's researchers analyzed:
A Premium Caesar Salad with grilled chicken from McDonald's -- without dressing -- had more than double the salt (890mg) of a large order of fries (350mg).
A maple- and brown sugar-flavored instant oatmeal had more than three times as much sodium as the plain kind.
The recommended daily limit for salt is 2,300mg (one teaspoon). Try to avoid processed food and read food labels to steer clear of the worst offenders.